International student migration and the postcolonial heritage of European higher education: perspectives from Portugal and the UK

Author:

Ploner Josef,Nada Cosmin

Abstract

AbstractWhilst the presence of international students from so-called ‘developing’ or ‘newly industrialised’ countries has become a ubiquitous phenomenon in European higher education, few scholars have explored the underlying postcolonial trajectories that facilitate student migration to many European countries today. In this article, we seek to narrow this gap by critically engaging with the postcolonial heritage of European higher education and the ways in which it informs much student migration in today’s era of neoliberal globalisation. We propose a three-fold approach to reading this postcolonial heritage of higher education which comprises its historical, epistemic, and experiential (or ‘lived’) dimensions. Whilst such an approach requires a close examination of existing postcolonial theory in higher education studies, we also draw on qualitative research with student migrants in Portugal and the UK to show how the postcolonial heritage of European higher education is negotiated in everyday contexts and may become constitutive of students’ identity formations.

Funder

University of Manchester

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Education

Reference58 articles.

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5. Busby, Eleanor (2018) Britain slips behind US as most popular country for educating world leaders due to hardline immigration policy. The Independent, August 14.

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